Our
Economic Future: From Best to Worst Case
by
Doug Casey
Casey Research
Recently:
Doug Casey
on DSK, the IMF, and the World Bank
There is a
great deal of uncertainty among investors about what the future
of the U.S. economy may look like so I decided to take a
stab at whats likely to happen over the next 20 years. That's
enough time for a child to grow up and mature, and it's long enough
for major trends to develop and make themselves felt.
Ill confine
myself to areas that are, as the benighted Rumsfeld might have observed,
known unknowns. I dont want to deal with possibilities
of the deus ex machina sort. So well rule out natural
events like a super-volcano eruption, an asteroid strike, a new
ice age, global warming, and the like. Although all these things
absolutely will occur sometime in the future, the timing is very
uncertain at least from the perspective of one human lifespan.
Its pointless dealing with geological time and astronomical
probability here. And, more important, theres absolutely nothing
we can do about such things.
So lets
limit ourselves to the possibilities presented by human action.
They're plenty weird and scary, and unpredictable enough.
THE MARKET
FOR PROGNOSTICATION
People are
all ears for predictions, whether from psychics or from experts,
despite the repeated experience that theyre almost always
worthless, often misleading and more than rarely the exact opposite
of what happens.
Most often,
the predictors go afoul by underrating human ingenuity or extrapolating
current trends too far. Let me give you a rundown of the state of
things during the last century, at 20-year intervals. If you didnt
know its what actually happened, you'd find it hard to believe.
1911
The entire world is at peace. Stability, freedom and prosperity
prevail almost everywhere. Almost every country in Europe is ruled
by a king or queen. Western civilization has spread to nearly every
corner of the world and is received with appreciation. Stunning
breakthroughs are being made in science and technology. Theres
no sign of a gigantic world war about to come out of nowhere to
rip apart the political and cultural map of Europe and bankrupt
everybody. Who imagined that a dictatorial communist regime would
arise in Russia?
1931
Its early in a disastrous worldwide depression. Attention
is on economic troubles, not on the virtually unthought-of possibility
that in less than 10 years a new world war would be under way against
Nazism and a resurgent Germany.
1951
Except for Vietnam, all that remains of the colonies the
West had established in the 19th century are quiescent. Nobody guessed
almost all would either be independent, or on their way, in 10 years.
China has joined Russia and many other countries as
totally collectivist. Who imagined that Germany and Japan, although
literally leveled, would be perhaps the best investments of the
century? Who guessed that the U.S. was already at its peak relative
to the rest of the world?
1971
Communist and overtly socialist countries all over the world
seem to be in ascendance, soon to be buoyed further by a decade
of rising commodity prices. The U.S. and the West are entering a
deep malaise. Little significance is attached to rumblings from
the Islamic world.
1991
Communism has collapsed as an ideology, the USSR has disappeared,
and China has radically reformed. Islam is increasingly in the news.
2011
The world financial/economic crisis is four years old, but
things are still holding together. Islamic terrorism and collapse
of old regimes in the Arab world dominate the news. China is viewed
as the worlds new powerhouse.
BAD AND
WORSE
Regrettably,
Im not much of a linguist. But I do pick up interesting semantic
trivia. In Spanish they dont say in the future,
as we do in English, which implies a definite outcome. Instead they
say en un futuro in a future which implies
many possible outcomes. Its a better way of assessing reality,
I think.
Here are three
20-year futures to consider. There are, obviously, many, many more
but I think these encompass the three most realistic broad
possibilities.
BEST CASE
FACTS GET FACED
Realizing what
a disaster the complete destruction of their currencies would be,
most governments decide to endure the pain of allowing interest
rates to rise and limiting increases in the money supply. Poorly
run corporations and banks are left to fail. Talk of abolishing
the Federal Reserve, and using a commodity for money, becomes serious
and widespread.
Shaken, the
U.S. ends its profligate ways, in part because it lacks the means
to continue, and in part because everyone but collectivist ideologues
has actually learned something from the brutal 10s and 20s.
Amidst massive
protests, the government closes much of its counterproductive apparatus,
eliminates many taxes, and lets 30% of its employees go. It also,
albeit reluctantly, liberalizes its regulation of the economy because
it has become impossible to deny that the U.S. has been falling
behind in all areas.
Although there
is a resurgence of libertarian thought reminiscent of the
Reagan-Thatcher era simple practicality is mainly responsible
for forcing the government's hand. For one thing, it cant
afford the bureaucracy needed to enforce detailed interference.
For another, entrepreneurs are increasingly just doing what they
please, partly from necessity and partly from a growing sense of
righteousness. Interest rates go to 25%, to compensate for high
levels of inflation. That's high enough to make it worthwhile for
people to save, and the capital base starts growing. The stock market
has collapsed to its lowest level in living experience (in real
terms), but the values available encourage people to become investors.
Business is restructured on a sound, debt-free basis, with little
speculation.
The U.S. radically
cuts its military spending and pulls almost all troops out of their
foreign bases and wars. The War on Drugs comes to an end, and the
crime rate in both the U.S. and Mexico plummets.
The government
solves most of its overhanging financial problems with a seriously
devalued but not hyperinflated dollar. The Social
Security deficit is eliminated by abstaining from benefit increases
and by inflating away much of what had been promised before. Most
Americans suffer a severe drop in their standard of living, as theyre
forced into new patterns of production and consumption. A generation
of college students find that their degrees in sociology, political
science, economics, English lit, Black studies, gender studies and
underwater basket weaving are of no real value.
When it's all
over, the tough times that started in '07 prove to have been no
more than a cyclical bump in the road, like all the other recessions
since WW2, just much bigger.
A rough and
memorable ride, but it ends with a return to prosperity.
MIDDLE CASE
FACTS ARE IGNORED
The worlds
governments continue under the delusion that printing massive quantities
of paper money will solve problems when, in fact, printing lies
at the base of the problems. Most currencies lose most of their
value. Some lose it all. This destroys the most productive people
in society, the middle class, who produce more than they consume
and save the difference... in currency.
And it injures
successful corporations that have billions, or even tens of billions,
in cash. Few of their managers know what to do with such sums other
than to hold currency; at best theyll buy their own and other
companies' stock. The result is a stock market boom in the midst
of a grim depression. But only one person in a hundred will be in
a position to benefit from it, because most will be living too close
to the edge, and the stock market will be the last thing on their
minds. The destruction of capital sets technology back quite a bit
in the U.S., Japan and Europe. Chindia increases its relative strength.
The U.S. government,
believing it has both the obligation and the ability to do
something, redoubles its control of the economy. Price controls
and capital controls are the order of the day. Petroleum products
are rationed. Enforcement of new regulations is assigned to a new
agency, the Economic Recovery Administration, which
resembles the TSA in most regards except it has many plain-clothes
employees, to better ferret out violators.
People think
increasingly of politics as the way to get what they want. More
and more Americans move abroad although things are deteriorating
in most places in the world. Poor, backwater countries offer the
best opportunities because their governments are either weak, or
corrupt, enough to allow new economic activity.
WORST CASE
WAR
War is the
worst thing that can happen to an economy, but its also the
most likely thing at this point. When the going gets tough, the
people in charge like to blame somebody else for the problem. Thats
compounded by the foolish but widely accepted notion
that war is good for the economy and that, for instance, it pulled
the U.S. out of the last depression.
Like all wars,
this one results in a complete stifling of civil and economic freedoms.
If my second scenario is unpleasant, this alternative is grim.
The big conflict
has already been teed up the continuation of the Forever
War between Islam and the West. Ill hazard the major situs
will be Europe which has pretty much always been the case
for wars in general for the last 2,000 years. Europe will be the
worst place to be over the next two decades. And North America will
be locked down like a police compound.
China will
have serious social turmoil as it is forced to reorient an export-driven
economy catering to Europe and the U.S. As in the past, South America
will be out of the conflict and in a position to benefit from it.
India will also be a net beneficiary, largely uninvolved, and happy
to watch their ex-colonial masters rope-a-dope themselves into poverty.
People will
always argue who really started it. Was it the Muslims when they
poured out of Arabia in the 630s? Or was it the West when it invaded
the Near East with the Crusades starting in 1099? Or was it the
Muslims when the Turks took Constantinople in 1453 (although only
40 year later the Muslims would lose Grenada, in Spain, as the reconquista
was completed) and then moved on to almost conquer Europe before
being turned back at Vienna in 1683? Or is it more relevant just
to look at recent history, starting at the beginning of the 19th
century, when the West conquered and colonized every single Muslim
country? Or the very recent past, when Muslims were counter-attacking,
using a new military approach popularly called terrorism?
My bottom line
is that the next twenty years may be dominated by the Forever War
that started in the 600s, being resumed in earnest. At least in
Europe, it has the prospect of becoming a war of survival, much
nastier than either WW1 or WW2.
That resumption
is being accelerated by what is going on in the Middle East now.
The chances that the upheaval in the Arab world will just peter
out and everyone will return to the status quo ante are about zero.
Its a culture-wide affair, much as the revolutions in Eastern
Europe were. Or, for that matter, the revolutions against Spain
in South America at the beginning of the 19th century.
The Arab revolutions
are a good thing, in that theyre getting rid of criminal regimes.
Some will be replaced with equally repressive cliques, although
manned with different criminals. I suspect a few might be more like
the French Revolution of 1789; good riddance to the old regime,
but then came Robespierre. And after him Napoleon.
Regardless
of how the tumult plays out in any particular country, the erstwhile
docile collaborators with Europe and the U.S. are being elbowed
aside, and the regimes that replace them are going to accommodate
the vast public constituency for hostility toward the West, if only
for the sake of internal political advantage.
The war is
not going to be fought with conventional armies. First of all because
the Islamic world doesnt have any that would last more than
a day or two against a Western army. But also because a Western
army is useless against an amorphous mass of millions of people.
So what will
the conflict be like? Amorphous and disjointed, chaotic and without
fixed fronts. Millions of Muslims are in Europe Pakistanis
in the UK, Turks in Germany, North Africans in France, Indonesians
in Holland. Europes destructive conquest of the world has
come back to bite. These people will approach majority status over
the next 20 years, both because they reproduce at several times
the rate of the Europeans and because theyre not being absorbed.
And because, now, millions and millions more are going to arrive
as boat people.
The natives
arent going to like it, for lots of reasons. And the outcome
will likely resemble what always happens when large numbers of unwelcome
foreigners invade a territory: violence.
One consequence
of the war, and especially of the collapse of the regime in Arabia
(in 2031 its no longer called Saudi Arabia, because the ruling
Saud family at least the ones who couldnt get to their
jets in time has been massacred) is a cut-off of oil until
the U.S. invades.
I hate to overemphasize
oil, but the world still runs on it. When something does happen
in Arabia, you can count on a disruption in the shipment of oil.
And absolutely count on active U.S. intervention.
A prolonged
guerrilla war, similar to those in Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya and
other Arab countries will follow. But there wont be any cover
story about ousting a bad guy or bringing democracy to the oppressed.
It will be pretty obvious to everybody that, from the Wests
point of view, it will start out simply to answer the question:
Whats our oil doing under their sand? But from the Muslims
point of view, it will be a different question: How can we rid ourselves
of these aggressive infidels once and for all? Then the West will
rephrase their question to: These people want to kill us! How can
we stop them once and for all?
You may be
thinking that the U.S. cant lose a war because it has a large
and extremely high-tech military. All those expensive toys can be
useful from time to time; they can win lots of small battles. But
theyre basically useless for winning the next generation of
warfare, as useless as cavalry in WW1, battleships in WW2, tanks
in Vietnam or nuclear missiles today.
What? Nuclear
missiles obsolete? Of course. Theyre expensive, clunky, and
the enemy can tell exactly where they came from. A plane, or a boat,
or a truck or a FedEx package is a much neater delivery
system. And there will be plenty of nuclear devices to deliver.
If theyre within the grasp of tiny countries like Israel and
North Korea, theyre within the grasp of anyone.
In fact, the
centerpieces of todays military are well on their way to the
scrapheap or to museum displays. There may well be a few aircraft
carriers, nuclear missiles, B-2 bombers, F-22 fighters, and the
like around in 20 years. But theyll be oddities reserved for
special purposes, like typewriters. Laser, electronic and robotic
weapons will have replaced those using gunpowder, and theyll
be readily available to anyone (an accelerant in the collapse of
the nation-state). The military's reliance on centralization and
on computer power will prove an Achilles heel; a gang of teenage
hackers (not only the best kind, but the most common kind) can devastate
a military for pure sport.
Conquest of
wealth or territory will be pointless; thats one thing even
the Soviets suspected in the 80s, when they still had the
power to invade Western Europe. Its now nothing like in the
old days, when a successful war yielded lots of gold, cattle and
slaves. This lack of an economic return will obviate one reason
for a military. The hollowing-out of nation-states will obviate
another; governments will find they just dont have either
the financial means or the popular support for serious military
establishments.
The military,
as the cutting edge of the nation-state, is in serious decline.
Conflict between groups will still exist, of course, but it will
be more informal, more the kind of thing that a Mafia or an Al-Qaeda
might conduct. The growth of private military contractors, like
Blackwater (now Xe), which only need be paid when in use, is indicative.
A BASIC
PLAN
Sorry I can't
do any better than a best-case scenario that just isn't very rosy
at least over the near term. And theres a high likelihood
of the worst-case scenario. There will probably be some overlapping
elements from all three, if Im on the right track.
From an economic
point of view, I see only two things as being predictable: One,
that many people will always produce more than they consume and
save the difference; this will create capital, which is critical
for not only a higher standard of living, but for the advancement
of technology.
Two, that since
there are currently more scientists and engineers alive than have
lived in all previous history combined, technology will keep advancing;
technology is the major force to advance the general standard of
living. So thats essentially why Im an optimist. Lets
just hope the savers arent wiped out, and the scientists dont
do too much government work.
The most sensible
plan for the next 20 years is to plan to survive. The days of He
who dies with the most toys wins, and of two whole generations
living way above their means, are over.
20 years isn't
forever. Think of it like a bear market, when the best thing to
do is take your chips off the table, grab some books and retire
to the beach for a year except that this is going to be a
lot longer and more serious. Nonetheless, I expect my fundamental
optimism to get through it undamaged, as should yours.
For one thing,
the long-term trend is favorable. Mankind has risen from subsistence
and living in caves as little as 12,000 years ago, to reaching for
the stars today and the rate of progress has been accelerating.
Why should that stop now?
But, as I mentioned
earlier, thinking too far in the future is perhaps pointless. So
what should you do now? The essential advice remains the same:
- Own gold
and silver. At Casey Research, weve made a lot of money
on them and theyre no longer cheap but theyre
going higher, simply for lack of alternatives. Look at them as
you would cash.
- Produce
more than you consume, and save the difference. This is no longer
the time for promiscuous, conspicuous consumption.
- Be alert
for speculations. Some markets will collapse (for instance, I
wouldnt want to own a McMansion in the suburbs or a collectible
car). Other markets will likely turn into manias, benefiting from
trillions of new currency units (I suspect mining stocks will
be one of them).
- Diversify
your assets (and yourself) politically and geographically. As
big a risk as the markets will be, your government is an even
bigger one.
And, incidentally,
were going to be looking carefully at the stock markets in
the Arab world. Its too early to buy. But theres a time
and a price for everything.
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June
8, 2011
Doug
Casey (send him mail)
is
a best-selling author and chairman of Casey
Research, LLC., publishers of Casey’s
International Speculator.
Copyright
© 2011 Casey
and Associates
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